The Sermon on the Mount by Christ was pretty epic. It’s in Matthew 5. It contains what J.C. taught about love. I can barely do it. My head blows up when people are cruel to innocent people or me. I don’t turn the other cheek, and I’m not at martyr level yet. I’m just being honest. I’m not sure I will ever be. Maybe that was J.C.’s mission since he is the Creator, and there have been so many mistakes made by universe actors. He felt the need to understand evil and suffering better since he allows it with free will.
Harry posted this, and my first thought was, “Then that person doesn’t love you.”

When you engage in real love, the blemishes and vices in yourself and the other person are just as important as the beauty and virtues because nobody is perfect. We’re all evolving and growing. But I think that is perfect. So imperfection is perfect if you’re authentic.
If you really love yourself and others, you love all of it. This is what men and women need to do with each other instead of complaining all the time. If you find yourself feeling that way, then you don’t love each other. That’s fine. Maybe someone else’s vices and virtues would suit you better. That’s what knowing synchronicity is for. Karma and dharma. Analog and antipode.
Perfectionism toward yourself and others kills love. I admit I can be guilty of this because error hurts people, and I am very affected by unnecessary suffering on this planet. It seems to me there is a mountain of it and there needs to be less. Still, I have to accept that some people are into suffering and making others suffer, but I don’t have to be around it.
Well, it’s not about me, is it. Everybody has to do themselves and hang out or don’t hang out.
